Nucleate Cultivate Hackathon

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Hello,

My name is Bertina Do, and I am a second year food science at the University of Guelph and an organizer part of Nucleate Cultivate. I am writing to inform you of an opportunity for students to participate in our annual hackathon for current challenges in cellular agriculture, with a $2000 cash prize for the winners! This hackathon is open to all students (STEM or not, Grad or Undergrad) and gives them the opportunity to compete, learn, work with industry mentors, and get immersed in the field of a/cellular agriculture.

Considering your background and network in the alt protein/cellular agriculture space, I am hoping that you could share our application and marketing blurb with any relevant students, professors and departments.

All the information is listed below and our application flyer has been attached.

Please feel free to email me with any questions/concerns.

From,
Bertina Do
Organizer of Nucleate Cultivate

Have you heard of cultivated meat? Animal-free dairy? Synbio based caviar? These are all examples of the rising industry: cellular agriculture. Cellular agriculture is moving quickly to revolutionize the future of food before our planet runs out of natural resources to feed our growing population – learn more here!

The Cultivate Tomorrow hackathon is a one-of-a-kind program to immerse students into the alternative protein field in a 3-month hacking period. We will provide education, personal mentorship from industry pioneers, exclusive seminar series, and professional development and networking opportunities. This year, we have introduced a new learning platform to optimize the hacking experience, while helping develop essential skills for students to develop a career in this field. We are open to undergraduate and graduate students with all different majors, skills, backgrounds, and levels of understanding of cell cultured food products. Together, in teams of four, YOU will help create a sustainable food system with your unique perspective, creativity, and motivation.

Compete in one of our tracks for two chances at a $2000 cash prize:

Advertising Strategy, where you will prepare a marketing strategy and advertising campaign for a specific novel food product.
Underutilized Resource/Novel Tech, where you will identify a new technology, material, or ingredient that can improve the production process for cell ag / precision fermentation.

The final deliverables will be unique to each track and will include things like a proposed marketing campaign, novel content, techno-economic analysis, literature review and more!

During the application period, Nucleate Cultivate will be holding open office-hours to address any questions that arise:
Friday, October 20th, 10-11AM EST – Zoom

Registration is open until November 1st. Registration and more information can be found on our website! Feel free to attend office hours or email cultivate@nucleate.xyz with any application or program related questions.

Best,
Nucleate Cultivate Team

Communications training for agricultural researchers

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Have great agricultural research to share but unsure of how to get it applied on the ground?

Join Seeding Success: Getting Your Research Into the Hands of Farmers, a three-part communications training course hosted by the BC Agricultural Climate Action Research Network and BC Food Web. Geared towards professionals and students working in agricultural extension and research, this training will build skills in the art and science of effective communications with a focus on written materials. The sessions will cover principles of adult learning, strategies and tips for translating research so that farmers will want to read it, and how to share your research summary to get it into more farmers’ hands. Participants will also have the option to complete a summary of their own research during the training.

Thursdays on Nov. 16, 23 and Dec. 7 from 9:30 – 11:00 am PST.

Learn more and register here: https://www.bcacarn.ca/rushmore_event/seeding-success/

For more details please contact Cao, Juliana at: juliana.cao@ubc.ca

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REMINDER: Advanced Models and Solutions for Mitigating the Impact of Ship Noise on Marine Mammals

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IOF SEMINAR – October 13, 2023

Advanced Models and Solutions for Mitigating the Impact of Ship Noise on Marine Mammals

Image by Alan Bedding from Pixabay

In the scientific community, it is now well recognized that anthropogenic noise poses serious threats to marine mammals. The main noise sources come from large commercial vessels such as cargo ships, tankers, cruise ships and ferries to small-size watercrafts such as motorized boats, fishing vessels and tugboats. Propeller cavitation, hull vibration and onboard machinery are the three primary sources of ship noise. In the low-frequency noise range (< 200 Hz), the propeller cavitation noise dominates the underwater-radiated noise (URN), which coincides with important frequencies used by whales and fish for their natural activities. In this talk, I will highlight our MELO project focusing on in-house high fidelity CFD and physics-based machine learning (PBML) models for modeling and controlling ship noise. To address this complex multidisciplinary problem of ship noise, the project aims to deliver a better understanding of fundamental physical mechanisms related to turbulent vortex and cavitation dynamics, which are essential elements for the generation of tonal and broadband propeller noise. For far-field noise propagation, we employ our PBML toolbox to create an end-to-end mapping between the ship noise source and the specified location of marine mammals. The proposed framework has a relevance to adaptive ship route optimization as well as the development of URN mitigation technologies.

 

Rajeev K. Jaiman is currently an Associate Professor and NSERC/Seaspan Industrial Research Chair in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the University of British Columbia (UBC), Vancouver. Prior to his current appointment at UBC, he was an assistant professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the National University of Singapore (NUS). Before joining NUS, he was the Director of CFD Development at Altair Engineering, California. Dr. Jaiman earned his first degree in Aerospace Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Mumbai. He received his master’s and doctorate degrees from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign with Computational Science and Engineering option. His research interests broadly include multiphysics simulations, fluid-structure interaction, computational fluid dynamics, data-driven modeling and machine learning.

 

Dr. Rajeev Jaiman
Professor
UBC Mechanical Engineering

Friday, October 13, 2023 – 11:00am  – 11:50 am
HYBRID: AERL Theatre, 2202 Main Mall, UBC Vancouver and
Online over Zoom

IOF community members (students, faculty and staff) do not need to RSVP for this seminar series.

UBC members, alumni, and all others, please RSVP at:
https://oceans.ubc.ca/rsvp-iof-seminars/

GradUpdate – Intro to Predictive Performance Assessment (stats), What’s Holding You Back? Getting Beyond Procrastination & Perfectionism (Keynote), Fireside Author Chat (Deliberate Doctorate), Abstracts: Communicating Research Findings, and more.

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GradUpdate

In this issue, Intro to Predictive Performance Assessment (stats), What’s Holding You Back? Getting Beyond Procrastination & Perfectionism (Keynote), Fireside Author Chat (Deliberate Doctorate), Abstracts: Communicating Research Findings With Brevity and Concision, and more.

Registration open

Introduction to Predictive Performance Assessment
Online | Friday, Oct 20 | 10 am – 12 pm

Register

Special Event

National Career Symposium for Graduate Students and Postdoctoral Fellows
Online | Tuesday – Thursday, Oct 24 – 26 | 10 am – 1 pm PST
4th annual Graduate and Postdoctoral Development Network event
Free, through UBC’s Sponsorship| Sessions include:

  • What’s Holding You Back? Getting Beyond Procrastination & Perfectionism, by Alex Abdel-Malek, MSW, RCC (Keynote)
  • Exploring Career & Professional Development Opportunities During Your Graduate Degree and Postdoc
  • Networking Strategies for Events and Conferences
  • Planning Your Postdoc
  • “Who am I?”: Claiming Your Professional Identity
  • Negotiating a Faculty Position: A Conversation with Reinhart Reithmeier by Reinhart Reithmeier
  • Making the Most of Your Non-Thesis/Course-Based Master’s Degree
  • Learning about the Employment Sector to Boost Career Exploration
  • Yes, Just Apply. You Are Marketable!
  • Interview STAR!

Agenda Register

Seats available

Introduction to Machine Learning
This webinar will introduce basic concepts behind the machine learning algorithms, their difference from statistical methods and the most common type of problems that can be tackled with machine learning algorithms.
Online | Friday, Oct 13 | 10 am – 12 pm Register

Events and Opportunities

A selection of upcoming events are highlighted below.  Visit  community.grad.ubc.ca and grad.ubc.ca/current-students/professional-development for our full events calendar.

ACADEMIC

The Deliberate Doctorate: A Fireside Chat with Dr. Leela Viswanathan
Join author Dr. Viswanathan in a discussion of her new book, The Deliberate Doctorate: a values-focused journey to your PhD, to learn how the activities in the book can help in your PhD journey
In person | Thursday, Oct 19 | 12 – 1:30 pm Register

Using Mendeley for Citation Management
Online | Monday, Oct 16 | 4:30 – 6 pm Register

CAREER

Employer Info Session
In person | CCI Inc | Monday, Oct 16 12:15 – 1:15 pm
In-person | RBC | Tuesday, Oct 17 12:30- 2 pm or 5:30- 7 pm
In person | Institute of International Education | Thursday, Oct 19 | Learn about fully funded master’s & PhD programs in Artificial Intelligence 12 – 1 pm

RESEARCH

Introduction to Machine Learning: Classification and Clustering
Online | Tuesday, Oct 17 | 12 – 2 pm | lectures and hands-on exercises using cloud-based platforms Register

Data Bites – Best Practices for Organizing File Directories
Online | Wednesday, Oct 18 | 1 – 1:30 pm Register

Introduction to Jupyter Notebooks
Online | Wednesday, Oct 18 | 2 – 3:30 pm Register

WRITING AND COMMUNICATION

Abstracts: Communicating Research Findings With Brevity and Concision
Hybrid | Wednesday, Oct 18 | 10 – 11:30 am Register